• Am. J. Surg. · Apr 2009

    Laparoscopic repair of inferior vena caval injury using a chitosan-based hemostatic dressing.

    • Hua Xie, Jeffrey S Teach, Allen P Burke, Lisa D Lucchesi, Ping-Cheng Wu, and Rebecca C Sarao.
    • Oregon Medical Laser Center, Providence St Vincent Medical Center, Portland, OR 97225, USA. hua.xie@providence.org
    • Am. J. Surg. 2009 Apr 1; 197 (4): 510-4.

    BackgroundVena caval injury is a rare but serious complication of laparoscopic surgery, and often requires conversion to an open procedure. The current study investigated whether a vena caval injury could be repaired with a chitosan dressing laparoscopically.MethodsSix domestic swine were studied. A 4- to 5-mm circumferential incision was created in the inferior vena cava (IVC) and repaired laparoscopically with a chitosan dressing. Neither suture nor additional hemostatic techniques were used. The animals were killed at 30 minutes (n = 2) and at 1 week (n = 4) postoperatively for histopathological analysis.ResultsAll IVC injuries were successfully repaired laparoscopically using a single chitosan dressing application without recurrent hemorrhaging. Mean operative time was 6 minutes and the blood loss was approximately 55 mL. There was no evidence of clot formation in the repaired vessels. Histology showed that the chitosan dressing had partially degenerated into small particles with moderate chronic inflammatory response 1 week after repair.ConclusionUse of the chitosan-based hemostatic dressing is a simple and reliable technique to control serious hemorrhage from IVC injury during laparoscopic surgery.

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